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Focus on therapy of hypnic headache.

The journal of headache and pain
August 1, 2010
Carlo Lisotto et al. (5 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the efficacy of melatonin as a preventive treatment for hypnic headache, either alone or in combination with other medications.

Results Summary

Melatonin did not show robust evidence as a single preventive agent for hypnic headache, but its combination with lithium or indomethacin appeared to enhance therapeutic efficacy.

Population

Patients with hypnic headache, primarily aged 50 years and older.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (7)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
lithium
decrease
hypnic headache
32 cases
-
demonstrated to be an efficacious treatment
#1
lithium
decrease
tolerability
elderly patients
-
significant adverse effects and poor tolerability are not rare
#2
indomethacin
decrease
hypnic headache
Many patients
-
Many patients reported a good response
#3
indomethacin
decrease
tolerability
some patients
-
some could not tolerate it
#4
caffeine
no change
hypnic headache prevention
-
-
did not yield robust evidence to recommend their use as single preventive agents
#5
melatonin
no change
hypnic headache prevention
-
-
did not yield robust evidence to recommend their use as single preventive agents
#6
caffeine and melatonin association with lithium or indomethacin
decrease
hypnic headache
-
-
seems to produce an additional therapeutic efficacy
#7
Abstract

Hypnic headache (HH) is a primary headache disorder, which occurs exclusively during sleep and usually begins after 50 years of age. There are no controlled trials for the treatment of HH. We reviewed all the available papers, including 119 cases published in literature up to date, reporting the efficacy of the medications used to treat HH. Acute treatment is not recommended, since no drug proved to be clearly effective and also because the intensity and the duration of the attacks do not require the intake of a medication in most cases. As for prevention, a wide variety of medications were reported to be of benefit in HH. The drugs that were found to be effective in at least five cases are: lithium, indomethacin, caffeine and flunarizine. Lithium was the most extensively studied compound and demonstrated to be an efficacious treatment in 32 cases. Unfortunately, despite its efficacy, significant adverse effects and poor tolerability are not rare, mainly in elderly patients. Many patients reported a good response to indomethacin, but some could not tolerate it. Caffeine and melatonin treatments did not yield robust evidence to recommend their use as single preventive agents. Nevertheless, their association with lithium or indomethacin seems to produce an additional therapeutic efficacy. A course of lithium should be tried first, followed 3-4 months later by tapering. If headache recurs during tapering, a longer duration of therapy may be needed. If lithium treatment does not provide a significant response, indomethacin can be commenced as second-line approach. If these treatments prove to be ineffective or poorly tolerated, other agents, such as caffeine and melatonin, can be administered.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Antimanic AgentsCaffeineFlunarizineHeadache Disorders, PrimaryHumansIndomethacinLithium Compounds
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy40/10
Quality65/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations9
Citations/Year0.6
Relative Citation Ratio0.39
NIH Percentile21.2%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.25
Weight Score1.04
Normalized Score0.49
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